Theresa May: written statement on extradition review

This was published under the 2010 to 2015 Conservative and Liberal Democrat coalition government

Delivered on:

8 September 2010

I am today announcing to Parliament the government’s plans to review the UK’s extradition arrangements.

The coalition’s programme for government document, published on 20 May, stated that ‘We will review the operation of the Extradition Act - and the US/UK extradition treaty - to make sure it is even-handed.’ This announcement sets out how we propose to do this.

There are a number of areas of the UK’s extradition arrangements which have attracted significant controversy in recent years. The government understands that these are longstanding concerns and the review will therefore focus on five issues to ensure that the UK’s extradition arrangements work both efficiently and in the interests of justice. These issues are:

breadth of Secretary of State discretion in an extradition case

the operation of the European Arrest Warrant, including the way in which those of its safeguards which are optional have been transposed into UK law

whether the forum bar to extradition should be commenced

whether the US-UK Extradition Treaty is unbalanced

whether requesting states should be required to provide prima facie evidence

The review will be conducted by a small panel of experts who we are now seeking to appoint. We expect the review to report by the end of the summer 2011.

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